1199: Homo naledi by Sara Borjas
1199: Homo naledi by Sara Borjas
Transcript
I’m Major Jackson and this is The Slowdown.
I used to look skeptically at my wife’s ever-growing collection of heart-shaped stones. They sit prominently on a low bookshelf in our living room. Their imperfections made them, in my eyes, simply a row of rocks. But as I began to accept my own deficiencies and limitations, they took on more significance. Now, I find myself on hikes involuntarily noticing any two near-symmetrical humps that curve down to a single point. I have even begun to add to our hearts. I am astonished when I find one. Its stoniness signifies resilience, but also our bumps and bruises through life, our journey together.
I am reminded of my family’s long relationship to stones, how my grandmother, a deeply spiritual woman, believed amethyst, tourmaline, and moonstones carried health benefits. She wore them on her hands and kept them in bowls around the house. I am reminded, too, of how my grandfather, a bricklayer, used to keep a worry stone in his jacket. Occasionally, I’d see him rubbing his thumb repeatedly over its smoothness.
My mother once lost her own worry stone. It always sat in the passenger door pocket of her car. Then, the gray pebble with a small white vein running through it could not be found. She frantically emptied the center console and glove compartment. She needed her stone to help ease her mind on road trips. Whenever my father turned at even the slowest speeds at intersections, she grabbed the door handle. When he entered a highway, she reached for the roof grip and didn’t let go. Not that his driving was awful, but she had been in too many accidents. She eventually found the stone wedged beneath the seat.
I see poems functioning in the way stones function, as protection, as foundation, even as weaponry. Today’s poem asserts those simple objects that manifest as testament of our durable existence in the face of opposing forces.
Homo naledi
by Sara Borjas
placed a stone in their dead’s hand to carve the next world, the sacred parts. I’ve acquired no daughters or money— no new ideas. And someone stole my Hyundai this past February in Oakland. I want to bear something beautiful, but I’m juggling seven incomplete futures: a down payment for a house, marriage to a man, knowing better but doing it anyways, my romantic admiration for women, DEI committees, and my mother: who she might have become had I stayed inside. I reach for futurity and end up with my grip on a centuries-old wound there at the back of my heart: a fine sharp stone, my delicate decolonial tool. Do you ever wonder if free and lost are the same disconnection? What can I hold in this life to stay sacred—to matter— even as I fight dogmas that promise I don’t? I want the oppressors to find my body and be reminded I was never scared to sleep, that I still loved my struggle and managed to get my nails done, having felt cute and died before deleting. I want my hopelessness in coloniality, my amusement with the temporary power of white people and men, riddled across my tireless, clutching hands. I want the colonizers mystified at how I dug with rubble this far. I want them to grow sick from studying me.
"Homo naledi" by Sara Borjas. Used by permission of the poet.